Robert Tannahill (1774-1810)
Robert
Tannahill, Paisley's world famous poet and songwriter, was the founder
and first secretary of the Paisley Burns Club. He was born on 3 June 1774 at Castle Street, Paisley, son of a well-respected 'bien' weaver to whom
Robert was apprenticed in 1786. Described by a contemporary as the 'prettiest
shuttler' he had ever seen, Robert had a wee box on his loom-post for
jotting down his ideas. At his cottage in Queen Street he composed
most of his best-known songs. An admirer of Burns, Robert Tannahill
founded a Burns Club in Paisley in 1805 at the Sun Tavern in the High
Street Paisley, the world's first Burns club. In 1807, encouraged by
friends, he published "The Soldier's Return" with poems and songs which
made him famous. When an Edinburgh publisher (Archibald Constable) rejected
a group of poems he burned many of his writings. He was often prone
to bouts of depression and he drowned himself in a culvert of the Candren
Burn, a canal in Paisley on 17 May 1810. Robert Tannahill is buried
in the United Presbyterian Church Canal Street. A monument was erected
on the site of lair no.366 in 1866. Tannahill's poems and songs are
still popular today -
'Jessie the Flower o' Dunblane', ' Will ye go Lassie go', ' Thou Bonnie Wood o' Craigielea' .